## Abstract The optimal treatment for concurrent injuries to the medial collateral and anterior cruciate ligaments has not been determined, despite numerous clinical and laboratory studies. The objective of this study was to examine the effect of surgical repair of the medial collateral ligament on
Ultrastructural morphometry of anterior cruciate and medial collateral ligaments: An experimental study in rabbits
β Scribed by R. A. Hart; Dr. S. L-Y. Woo; P. O. Newton
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1992
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 889 KB
- Volume
- 10
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0736-0266
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
This study presents morphometric analyses of collagen subfascicle area fraction and collagen fibril diameter distributions for the anterior cruciate (ACL) and medial collateral (MCL) knee ligaments from transmission electron micrographs of ligament cross sections of five mature, female New Zealand White rabbits. Statistically significant differences in subfascicular area fractions were found between the ACL and MCL (0.89 Β± 0.02, 0.97 Β± 0.01, respectively; p < 0.001). Mean fibril diameters for the ACL and MCL were also significantly different (0.059 Β± 0.005, 0.085 Β± 0.011 ΞΌm, respectively; p < 0.025). Fibril eccentricity (a measure of parallel alignment of collagen fibrils within the ligaments, defined as the ratio of minor to major axes of elliptical fibril outlines) was 0.89 Β± 0.03 and 0.85 Β± 0.08, respectively, for the ACL and MCL; these data were not significantly different (p > 0.1). The relative amount of variation in the pooled fibril diameter data due to variation between animals, ligaments, locations within ligaments, and among fibrils at individual locations are reported. The variation of fibril diameter distributions between the ACL and MCL was substantially greater than the variation between different locations within each ligament cross section as well as between different animals. The structural differences reported may help explain known differences in the biomechanical properties of the ACL and MCL.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Progressive physiological and mechanical changes in the medial collateral ligament of the adult rabbit were investigated for as long as 48 weeks after disruption of the anterior cruciate ligament. Eighty-one New Zealand White rabbits were separated into experimental, sham-operated control, and norma
## Abstract The effects of healing time and anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction on healing of the medial collateral ligament and stability of the knee joint were evaluated in a rabbit model of an O'Donoghue triad injury (rupture of the medial collateral ligament with removal of the anterior c
## Abstract The integrins are a family of adhesionβmediating cell surface receptors that play critical roles in cellβextracellular matrix interactions and have been shown to be important in the healing response in several tissues. We have studied integrin expression in normal human and rabbit anter
The purpose of this study was to compare the levels of procollagen type I messenger RNA (mRNA) in normal and healing medial collateral ligament (MCL) and anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) in a rabbit model. Our method of injury involved a surgical model with identical partial lacerations in the midsu